June's dying letter to Alice reads: "Dear Alice, When we stay silent, they win. In my shed there's a book I've put aside for you that I call 'The Lost Flowers.' Alice, these are the stories I should have shared with you when you were old enough to hear them, and still looking for answers. When women started to come here, it became almost a ritual that one night they'd come to the shed and tell me what happened to them and watch as I wrote it down. A record, there in black and white. They're the stories I started to write as a young woman. I had my voice taken from me in a brutal crime at the river when I was very young. I let men silence me. Writing down these stories, I found my voice again. The stories of 'The Lost Flowers' are of women whose lives and histories have been erased, mainly by men. Men will never be made accountable for what they've done because they are our sons, they are our brothers, our lovers, our heroes. To speak out against them, people who we love, that we trust, who live in our homes, who should be there to protect us, to tell those stories and to be heard, believed, it is so hard. But we pay for our silence, Alice. The secrets, the shame, it eats a way at us. It lets men like Dylan get to be the only voice. They get to rewrite history, erase us, define who we are. I found my voice again by listening to other women's stories. Hearing them speak, I realised I wasn't alone. I give you my story, Alice, to add to yours, because you have a voice, a great big beautiful voice, and now is the time to use it."